Tuesday, June 4, 2013

How do you get someone to not only tell you one of their
biggest secrets but agree to let you show it to the whole world? The answer to that question is very
carefully. This was the idea behind my
project, Behind the Cardboard. Last term
I had a project where I photographed people playing “nerdy” games but was very careful
not to show there face because the people did not want to be associated with
these games. It was this juxtaposition
of loving to play the game but at the same time being embarrassed by it that I wanted
to explore in this project. However,
because the people were embarrassed by the fact that they play Magic most
people I talked to about sitting for the project flat out refused. The six who you see in the set here are the
only people I could get to agree to do it.
It took a week of discussion but I was able to persuade them in the end. Finally, I decided to use a simple one light
set up for this shoot, because I always use a huge light set up for my
projects, so I wanted to mix it up this time.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Not only is that art of McDermott & McGough a simulation
but so was their lives for a long time. They
very much took the words of Baudrillard very seriously. From the early 80’s to 1995 all parts of their
lives were a simulation of a bygone era.
During this time there work focused mainly on the creation of period photographic
pieces. They would use an old form of
photography but also have their subject dressed in period clothing and posed as
they would have been from that period. And
beyond there work, they lived their lives as a period piece. They would dress as turn of the century “men
about town” and even converted there house to be completely turn of the
century.

However, in 1995 they stopped
living in this manner, and that is when there work became very interesting. They continued in the same manner that they
had before only now their work also took on new implications. Once they stopped living in the past they let
the present begin to influence their images.
While still period pieces they let used them as a mirror against the
modern world to show just what little progress we have really made.

Monday, April 29, 2013

To say that I was lost for this part of the project is an understatement. Figuring out a video to make from the images
and ideas I had already was not easy, nor was filming. In fact, I filmed and refilmed multiple times
and was never truly happy with the outcome.
I also found my idea changing quite a bit. When I started the idea I had was to really
show the original idea that I had, which was to just walk around and find the extraordinary
in the everyday world around us. So originally
the video was of me walking the route I took when I was taking the pictures,
with me focusing on the subjects on the pictures. However, I felt that this did not come out
well at all so I completely changed my idea.
One of the things that I realized as I was going over my material was
that things looked very different because the images were shot with a 20mm lens
whereas the video was shot with a 50mm one.
So I decided that in my video I should really highlight the differences
between the two. So then the video
became a back and forth between the images and the clips of the subjects from
the video I took.

Monday, April 22, 2013

What struck me most from Bill Viola’s convocation lecture was in the
beginning when he talked about how blessed we as young people are to be born
into a world that is falling apart so we can try to fix it. This really struck me as interesting because
of many conversations that I have had with my own parents on this exact
topic. It was an interesting take on
something that many in my generation see as our doom. When talking with my parents about this topic
what both interests them, and scares them, is how forlorn my generation is
about their future. Individuals from my
generation look at the future and see nothing there. The environment is being destroyed, every day
the news tells us that we are one step closer to one war or another, there is constantly
more violence, and the economy is just terrifying. So for us who are just entering into the
world for real it is not something we really look forward to. That is why Bill’s idea really stuck out to
me. He wants us to look at the world and
all that is going wrong with it and not see our impending doom, but see a way
to prevent that doom that is staring us right in the face. While this seems like such a simple thing to
do, it is in fact an incredible undertaking for us to make, me especially. It requires us to overcome the fear of what
may happen and look onto what can happen instead, and for someone like me who
for so long wanted to enter into a profession that profits from the short
coming of our own government, it is quite a jump to make.

Monday, April 15, 2013

When going over the pages of Simulations for this project the idea that really stuck out was
that of hyper-reality. I was thinking
about this one night on the way back from the Bar’s when the idea hit me that
even the real world around us can be quite surreal. Therefore in this project I wanted to try and
pull that surreality out and put it on display.
I did this by walking around town looking for things that just seem like
they should not exist in the way they do.
Then from there I took these images and over saturated the colors in
order to make it seem that much more hyper-real. I really enjoyed this project and think that
I was able to make my vision a reality.

I had extremely mixed feelings about Sonja Thomsen work. I found a lot of her ideas to be very interesting
but her execution of them to be lacking.
Many times I found myself extremely intrigued with an idea or theory
that she was presenting but then I saw the actual piece I was let down. As well, the exhibit that was show here at Lawrence
I also had very mixed feelings about. As
usual I found her idea to be extremely interesting but execution somewhat
lacking. The biggest issue I had with it
was the images themselves. I loved the presentation
of the images and the way the whole gallery worked but I thought that work its
self was lacking. I felt that the images
where quite bland.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

For this project I wanted to look at the ideas of
insanity and violence that are prevalent throughout the book Wisconsin Death Trip. Many of the newspaper articles that Michael Lesy uses in the book have that theme
running through out them. There is a lot
about people going crazy and committing murders or strange seemingly random
acts of violence. So from the book I got
a feeling of insanity. So I wanted my
movie to evoke the mind of a crazy person.
From that jumping off point I came up with a few idea of things that I
thought would be weird and crazy and would promote this feeling. From there I had the idea of making each of
the “episodes” happen out of order, so that the viewer got the feeling that the
person was not able to process what is going on correctly. In general I loved this project because I felt
that it gave me a lot of freedom creatively and allowed me to really develop
this vision I had for the project, which is something that I feel I have not
been able to do the rest of the term.
Finally, I would like to apologize for not having a youtube video of my
project. One of my models did not want
it on the internet since the movie had images of her naked, as well due to the
nudity it violated youtube’s terms of service.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

I had very mixed feelings about Evan Baden’s work. His first
series Illuminati I thought was incredible.
It had a great Idea behind it, and was executed beautifully. However, I felt that the same cannot be said
for the rest of his work. His second
body of work, Technically Intimate, I greatly disliked. The biggest issue I had with the project was
that after I heard him talking about it I felt that his impotence for the
project was his own obsession with porn that he refused to admit to, a thought
that others in attendance had as well. This
changed my view of the project from it being artistic to porn. In addition to that I felt that the motifs in
the images were quite basic and did not really push the idea beyond a very
obvious level. Finally I felt that in
many ways his third project was just an extension of his second project,
however I felt that it was even more exploitative than the second.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

I Found Working on this project to be very interesting. Friedrich Nietzsche is not someone that one
would normally think about having to do anything with art, but strangely enough
it turns out that he does in fact have quite an influence on art, and theories
on art. However, because he is someone
that is not commonly associated with art, there is not a lot of reference to
him in journals or articles. This was
not as much of a detriment to my research as one might think, because it lead
me down a very interesting path. What I found
was that Nietzsche’s ideas have invaded our popular culture, and that culture
has in many ways watered down and perverted the ideas. However, it is thought this dissemination
though popular culture that Nietzsche has entered into art directly. Because his ideas are part of the common
lexicon much of his work has ended up in many movies and music by accident.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

This Project was way way out of my comfort zone.While I love music and it has always been a
big part of my life I have never been one to make it.I am for all intents and purposes tone deaf
so I have always stayed away from making music.So when I was presented with this project I became quite worried.I did not think I would be able to do the
project because I have never been able to make anything that sounded in any way
decent in the past.However, after a couple
of hours of working on the project when everything started to come together my
feelings on the matter completely changed, to the point that by the end I
became much more confident in what I was creating.I also have a bit of trouble uploading the
files to youtube.It took me a very long
time to figure out how to get them up there.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

The main issue I found with this project
was repetition. I am used to doing
projects with 12 images in them max, and it is very hard to become repetitious
with so few images. So when I was
thinking about the project the thought that the images may start to become
repetitive never entered my mind. However,
once I started shooting and editing I felt a bit of repetitiveness start, so I
found myself having to really work on the photos to remove this feeling. Another feeling that I kept having during the
project was frustration. While it was
much faster and easier to work with and edit the photos on the computer as
opposed to in a dark room I still found myself hating it. Coming from a film background I have my way
of looking at, working with, and arranging photos. However, none of that works in digital. For this reason I found it very hard to
choose an order for the photos, and in general became quite frustrated with the
whole process.

Monday, January 28, 2013

I felt that Lynda Barry was the best convo speaker in my time so far at Lawrence. She was able to be thought provoking and funny and all around interesting. This is something that I have not seen another convo speaker do. But enough of that what did I like about her speech. I found her way of connecting things incredibly interesting and enjoyable. I really liked how she used familys and art and technology together. Her discussion of how parents relate to there children is changing because of new technology was incredibly interesting. However, what I found the most amazing, was the story she told about phantom pain. I had to agree with her about it, it was strange that what was most definitively a medical process was not considered one because it used an image overlay. To me there was something very wrong about that. With that being said however, I still thought that the story was incredible. The fact that the experiment worked was so fascinating, it really makes you wonder about the human brain.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

For
this movie I really wanted to capture the idea of space being present in all
times. I tried to capture this through the use
of extremely long shots. What I was trying to capture was
the permanence of spaces and objects throughout time. I wanted
to show that while things change that space that I saw there never will because
at that point in time it existed. I wanted to put the songTime is On My Sideby the Rolling Stones in the video, but I had
trouble getting it to the program. It is for that reason that I left the
video silent.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

There have been a number of artists who have really shaped me as an artist. Of all of these artists there are three who stand above the rest, they are Chuck Close, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Ian Ruhter. The images of these three men have inspired me in incredible ways.

The first to have a real impact on me was Henri Cartier-Bresson. While looking at his images of street photography, I was filled with a sense of aw due to his ability to capture the magnificence on the every day. As I have discussed before this ability to turn even the most mundane days into something special is something that I have tried to recreate on my own.

Chuck Close and Ian Ruhter have inspired me in similar ways. They have both effected the way I create portraiture as well push me to try and create Daguerreotype's. They both create these incredibly detailed and complex portraits that have greatly influenced my own portraits. There is something about the beauty subtle intangible beauty to there portraits which can not be expressed, which I have tried to recreate in my own portraits.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Most of my art comes from two somewhat cliche places. The first is how I view the world, and the second is how I view myself in the world. These two ideas have greatly shaped the way I look at and create art. This is most evident in my final projects in Intro and Intermediate Photo.

The first Image is from the final project for Intro to Photo. The idea behind the project was to take the everyday world and make it beautiful and aw inspiring through abstraction. The idea for this project came quite simply from the way in which I see the world. Which is the first place from which my art originates. My final project from Intermediate Photo exemplify's the world as I see it through myself. For this project I made a series of portraits of Jewish students who attend Lawrence. I then used these portraits to exemplify the community feel of Judaism. The series showed that while we all come from different walks of life, look different, and may even come from very different racial backgrounds we are all connected by our Judaism and the community we gain from it. This was conclusion that I had come to after much thinking on the matter.

The image above exemplify's who I am better than anything else I can think of. There is very much two sides to my personality, and they come out in the choice of majors I have made. The first is ordered and reasonable. This then is my Government major. Whereas the other side is creative and much more free, that would be my studio art major. Now, the Image above has brought both of those worlds together. It is an image with great political significance. I took this image while working with the artist Wing Young Huie on his Chalk Talk project. The image is of a ex-army chemical engineer who was part of the teams that looked for WMDs in Iraq. After returning home and realizing that he has been lied to by his government and that his purpose in life was pretty much a lie he was broken. While he has a wife and kids he could not support them and ended up homeless. However, by the time I met him and took this picture he had found a new purpose in life, being the best father he could be and finding a way to provide for his family.

Finally, I leave you all with the below image, to reflect on the world, and the tremendous beauty contained within it and the road you take through it.

My website can be found at the following link. http://frankliebermanphotography.artworkfolio.com/